With Cantata Collective, Nicholas McGegan adds to his luster in Bach's St. Matthew Passion
No matter to what degree you take J.S. Bach's settings of the gospel accounts of Jesus' suffering and death (the Passions) as confirmations of faith, esthetically they are shrewdly constructed to unify the narrative and spiritual centrality of the narrative and its durable meaning. The dogma of resurrection is strongly implied, of course, but the journey through the betrayal and capture of the figure Christians assert was God's anointed both raises and settles questions about the significance of his sacrifice for humankind. Human promises of undying loyalty to the Savior are undercut by Jesus' isolation in the Straightforward leadership from McGegan Garden of Gethsemane, as the disciples fall asleep after declaring their intention to stay watchful. In a new recording conducted by Nicholas McGegan featuring Cantata Collective (issued in April on Avie Records) , among the excellent features is the singing of bass-baritone Paul Max Tipton as Jesus. At the point just allu...